The Modernization Imperative

This book argues that contemporary society in Western democracies is generally misunderstood to be a pyramidal hierarchy dominated either by government or the economy. Neither view is correct. We live in a fundamentally pluralistic society divided into numerous 'modular' social systems each performing different functions; these include politics, public administration, the armed forces, law, economics, religion, education, health and the mass media. Because each is specialized, none of these systems are dominant and there is no overall hierarchy of power. Modernizing societies are therefore structured more like a mosaic than a pyramid. Modernization is the tendency for growth in the adaptive complexity and efficiency of the social systems. Growth in complexity is shaped by selection processes which maintain the functionality of social systems. The best examples are the market economy, science and democratic politics. The process of modernization is both inevitable and, on the whole, desirable: this constitutes the modernization imperative. Therefore, the proper question should not be whether society should modernize, but how.

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The Modernization Imperative

This book argues that contemporary society in Western democracies is generally misunderstood to be a pyramidal hierarchy dominated either by government or the economy. Neither view is correct. We live in a fundamentally pluralistic society divided into numerous 'modular' social systems each performing different functions; these include politics, public administration, the armed forces, law, economics, religion, education, health and the mass media. Because each is specialized, none of these systems are dominant and there is no overall hierarchy of power. Modernizing societies are therefore structured more like a mosaic than a pyramid. Modernization is the tendency for growth in the adaptive complexity and efficiency of the social systems. Growth in complexity is shaped by selection processes which maintain the functionality of social systems. The best examples are the market economy, science and democratic politics. The process of modernization is both inevitable and, on the whole, desirable: this constitutes the modernization imperative. Therefore, the proper question should not be whether society should modernize, but how.

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The Modernization Imperative

The Modernization Imperative

The Modernization Imperative

The Modernization Imperative

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Overview

This book argues that contemporary society in Western democracies is generally misunderstood to be a pyramidal hierarchy dominated either by government or the economy. Neither view is correct. We live in a fundamentally pluralistic society divided into numerous 'modular' social systems each performing different functions; these include politics, public administration, the armed forces, law, economics, religion, education, health and the mass media. Because each is specialized, none of these systems are dominant and there is no overall hierarchy of power. Modernizing societies are therefore structured more like a mosaic than a pyramid. Modernization is the tendency for growth in the adaptive complexity and efficiency of the social systems. Growth in complexity is shaped by selection processes which maintain the functionality of social systems. The best examples are the market economy, science and democratic politics. The process of modernization is both inevitable and, on the whole, desirable: this constitutes the modernization imperative. Therefore, the proper question should not be whether society should modernize, but how.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780907845522
Publisher: Imprint Academic
Publication date: 10/07/2003
Series: Societas Series , #8
Pages: 87
Product dimensions: 5.68(w) x 8.24(h) x 0.30(d)

About the Author

Reader in Evolutionary Psychiatry at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne and Editor in Chief of the Medical Hypotheses journal

Lecturer in Computing Science at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne

Table of Contents

Introduction1
Chapter 1Defining Modernization3
Modern societies3
Modernization and complexity6
Social cohesion7
Economism10
'Scissors, rock, paper' interdependency12
The inevitability of modernization14
Politicians and modernization16
The desirability of modernization19
The ethos of modernization22
Chapter 2Education and Modernization25
Economic drives towards educational expansion27
Political drives towards educational expansion28
Education in flexible abstraction30
Education and social progress31
Chapter 3Politics and Modernization35
Modernization and democracy37
Moral modularity40
Morality and democracy42
The priority of process45
Single issue politics and morality46
Chapter 4Opposition to Modernization49
High status intellectuals and modernization49
Environmentalism against modernization52
Optimism versus pessimism53
Modernization and alienation55
Modernizing alienation59
Chapter 5The Future of Modernization63
AppendixSystems Theory65
Where do systems come from?66
System boundaries68
Humans as communication units70
Advantages of complexity72
Selection and functionality75
System 'languages'77
The power of cognitive specialization79
Rationality and selection80
The modernization imperative81
Bibliography83
Societas: Essays in political and cultural criticism88
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